October 2007


People often ask me what is going on and what there is to do; I get alot of information and I’ll share it now with you. Here’s what’s up for the month of November.

NEW YORK
Thursday the 1st: Spotlight on Kara Walker @ the Whitney (full day of events)

Thurdsay the 1st: Bruce Davidson and Ilan Stevans In Conversation @ The Jewish Museum 6:30PM

Tuesday the 6th: Talents II: New Photography from Berlin, Artist’s Talk @ Goethe-Institut New York 5PM

Wednesday the 7th: There You Go Again: Orwell Comes to America Conference @ NYPL 10AM-6PM

Thursday the 8th: Berlin-New York Dialogues Exhibition Opening @ Center for Architecture New York 6PM-10PM (see link for month-long related programs)

Thursday the 8th: Allan Kaprow: Art and Life @ The Jewish Museum 6:30PM

Thursday the 15th - Saturday the 17th: Here and Now: African and African American Art and Film Conference @ NYU

Thursday the 1st through Thursday the 20th: Performa 07.

Onward through January 1st: New Photography at the MoMA

ROCHESTER
Onward through January 27th: Male & Female: Gender Performed in Photographs @ the George Eastman House

CHICAGO
Onward through January 21st: William Pope.L: Drawing, Dreaming, Drowning @ Art Institute of Chicago

That’s all for now. Other cities to come.

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Last month I picked up a few books at Spoonbill and Sugartown, a fine bookseller in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, a neighborhood where I jokingly “vacation” because I’m rarely there but it’s sunny, calm, and beautiful when I show up, and among the paperbacks I selected was the volume “A Dictionary of Art and Artists” by Peter and Linda Murray. The book was published in 1968 and alphabetically outlines the contributions of some major and many, many more minor European and American artists whose names have been long forgotten since the 12th century onward. I used to see myself as the guardian of bygone infomation, relishing a 1963 publication of Bartlett’s familiar quotations, featuring quotes long-dissipated into the ether by so-and-sos also long dead, or a mathbook of advanced geometry from the 1930s, or thoughts of reading lists and curriculums of the 60s, 70s, and 80s, all of these compendiums revealing the ideal knowledge bases of the time at which the book was published. In general, I am interested in what people know and how they came to know it. This extends to an understanding of who and what comprises the cultural memory at any given time. History only saves but so many names, and usually the achievements of the remembered are tersely described. To be certain, collecting old compendiums can contribute to this understanding: read enough compendiums and you might end up with good context for understanding a particular era, movement, decade, or philosophy. But, personally, this guardianship didn’t seem so urgent anymore given several new ways of thinking.

Encyclopedias, thesauri, and almanacks were the beginning of thinking “neurally”, the mediums encourage cross-reference within its pages and engender curousity. (I know I’m not the only one who read dictionaries when I was young.) But, to remain relevant, the information had to be up to date. In the 1970s and 1980s publishers offered an annual “yearbook” volume of current meaning and events, for culturally, no one was expected to purchase a brand new encyclopedia set each year. A set of encyclopedias represented the most basic body of knowledge a family needed to know throughout the course of its lifetime. Today we have Wikipedia and other online resources, and information is much less standardized and accessed randomly and sometimes in much lesser detail.

Since buying that book, I have experienced mental episodes of “constant refresh”: where old information (X) replaces new (X+a few minutes) of its own accord, like a homepage, wiping clean whatever brilliant idea was before it, and replacing it with something anew, rendering the initial idea completely lost. It’s occured to me that maybe this phenomenon, with its off-setting amnesia, will occur only throughout the creative process or during key points of individual growth and advancement. However, I suggest, in this age, where people are acquiring and processing concepts in such a rapid manner, amid this climate of unending content and constant access to information, the constant refresh is a physiological adaptation for handling new ideas at all. Some spiritual lexicons might define this refresh function as a shift to the “Now” as we reach new levels of understanding. However it may take form I am interested in the human mind and how we will employ our intellect in the future. If we adapt to a global “constant refresh” of ideas and meaning and aesthetics, the old stuff of yesterday’s compendiums will not matter; they will disappear, be gone. The question I asked myself, can the “old stuff” turn up in our thinking anyway, can it be accessed, shall it impress itself elsewhere upon our psyche?

I believe it will. I believe in the importance of context and understanding cultural memory, and through this, the old stuff will be drawn upon, if not by name, unconsciously through a subliminal body of reference. Compendiums inspire. I believe societies should share a comprehensive practical knowledge base of the past in order to intellectually contextualize the present and future. This week a friend’s high school students estimated the Emancipation Proclamation was written in the 1950s, and gauged that at least half of the United States population was black: without a solid knowledge base we are lost. People also share a long visual memory of symbols, photographs, tableaus, and icons, be it nooses or blackface, that inspire our actions, choices, and expression. Unearthing and uprooting the subtext to our thinking and behavior only clears the path for new ideas. A constant refresh can only replace information we needn’t know as it’s no longer pertinent to our evolution, but not the information we still need to work through.

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A few weeks ago, at the Studio Museum in Harlem’s Uptown Friday, guests were given a sort of party favor in a “folded poster” produced by The Map Office. I’ve just gotten around to opening mine and hanging it by its “optimal pinning vectors.” The result: a 3-D sculptural poster, printed as an optical illusion reading text from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man: “I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me.” That the design would pull that phrase is a little hackneyed to me, at least, it is in association with SMH, but I was excited and surprised to see it suspended there on my wall. Having photographed it, it reads far more clear than if you were to see it in person. Very cool.

ALSO, I am very excited by Erik Loyer, a media artist based in CA. I first came to know his work a little more than a year ago, when I checked out “Hollowbound Book”, part of the Mediaworks pamphelet series from MIT Press.

He is interested in how “digital interactivity enables human eloquence.” Great! Wow.

See these projects:
Virtual Window
Public Secrets

and more at http://erikloyer.com/

I should add that, in my observation, whereas once the internet could conceivably replace offline activities, there has been a shift. The internet is now used to enrich offline activities. Here are some places to look up your esoteric, old-fashioned interests:

FOOD, BEERMAKING:
http://thuisgemaakt.blogspot.com/

CRAFTS/TEXTILES/FABRICS:
http://www.ohjoy.blogs.com
http://www.selvedge.org/

BOOKS:
http://www.goodreads.com

SOAPMAKING and CANDLEMAKING
http://www.cranberrylane.com/soapmaking.htm
http://www.candletech.com/
http://www.candlesandcandlemaking.com/

ALTERNATIVE PROCESS PHOTOGRAPHY:
http://www.alternativephotography.com/

and a VIDEO on collodion process:
The Wet Plate Collodion Process

A life offline.

I had a conversation recently which pointed out that lately people are so-inclined to adopting antiquated ways of doing things, particularly as it pertains to young photographers, over-saturated with the digital age, taking up collodion and other virtually obsolete processes of photography. I look at my own life, and the curious lives of others who have gotten SERIOUS about crafts, baking bread, knitting, writing longhand, and more, and wonder, if this trend is the method to balancing to a life increasingly lived virtually and digitally, if not completely online. As we move into the future, will we move into the past? I want to say everything old is old again, or that everything old is new, but neither is correct. Everything is exactly as it is, or so becomes the meaning of meaning when practices are revived and used out of context.

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Lately the phrase “unbought and unbossed,” the title of Shirley Chisholm’s autobiography, has rang repeatedly like a meme in my brain. Between that, and that the phrase, “The Good Fight” appeared to me this week, I wonder if Mrs. C is watching me. I look at a woman like Chisholm, the Congresswoman from New York City who ran for president in 1972, and wonder what the world would be like with more of them.

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Yesterday, prompted by negative characterization of her in Justice Clarence Thomas’ newly-released memoir, My Grandfather’s Son, in a stunning op-ed, Anita Hill confirmed, “I stand by my testimony” in reference to her allegations of sexual harrassment which became a central argument in Thomas’ 1991 confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice. Elegant, gracious, and fair-handed, Hill lays out details of their professional relationship and assesses the state of sexual harrassment today. As a crime, sexual harassment was still a new concept in 1991, although its habits were not unfamiliar to the women and men who suffered by it for ages. The controversy also denoted a shift in public portrayal of black solidarity: revealing potential discordance within the black experience among two black people, as dramatized by, of all things, two black conservatives. Anita Hill did not stand behind rules of race-based support of high-reaching black male figures. Rather, her testimony aroused the hegemonic, disenfranchising attitudes of men towards women, and the complex relationships between women everywhere and The System at-large. This choice could be called an important moment in post-integrationist experience, where personal priority of access to justice breaks from the identity and priorities of the ethnic group.

But you knew that already.

Later, on the same day, former New York Knicks exec Anuncha Browne Sanders (below) was awarded $11.6 million in damages on behalf of Isaiah Thomas and Madison Square Garden for sexual harassment, cover-up, and the subsequent loss of her job, all of which led to a degraded quality of life.

What times we live in. I respect them both.
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In sixteen years, from Thomas to Thomas, one October to another, what has changed? I don’t know. There is something divinely meant in this confluence of coincidences; two black women, testifying in two Octobers, against two black Thomases, and making grand statements on the same day. You couldn’t have planned it. But what will change from here?

But I do know that sixteen years later Anita Hill, having been rewarded with nothing, still efforts to clear her name.

See and hear Hill’s original testimony from October 11, 1991 here.